Washington Post by Alan Zilberman
O’Reilly’s ambitions notwithstanding, “Moscow” is uneven because of the inescapable nature of such interlocking narratives: some land better than others.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Russia, Ireland · 2017
1h 41m
Director Johnny O'Reilly
Starring Mikhail Efremov, Yuriy Stoyanov, Aleksey Serebryakov, Evgenia Brik
Genre Comedy, Drama, Romance
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The lives of five people in contemporary Moscow intersect in surprising ways. Some wish to leave, some wish to stay, and some are simply stifled by the limits that come with living under a repressive government. The stories make a provocative statement about the city of Moscow, Russian identity, and life in Putin's Russia.
Washington Post by Alan Zilberman
O’Reilly’s ambitions notwithstanding, “Moscow” is uneven because of the inescapable nature of such interlocking narratives: some land better than others.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
Absent fathers and mothers, building bridges with children — Moscow Never Sleeps could easily have unfolded in a much darker register. That it doesn’t is both refreshing and deflating.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Although the film’s overstuffed, overpopulated storyline proves only sporadically interesting, it’s notable for at least providing an alternative view of a city more commonly associated with wintry gloom, corruption and heavy drinking.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
O’Reilly has crafted a meticulously drawn tapestry of universal human themes within a setting that’s as unique as it is familiar.
The various story currents move swiftly but don’t run particularly deep, so the film works better as a kind of best-foot-forward overview of modern urban Russia — “Moscow, I Love You” — than it does as a multi-stranded human drama.
Village Voice by Kristen Yoonsoo Kim
Moscow Never Sleeps is ambitious to a fault. While O’Reilly flexes an ability to tie together several narratives, he introduces so many characters that some of their stories must fall by the wayside. It’s a shame, because that muddles the more interesting vignettes.
Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray
Moscow Never Sleeps is well made but stilted, following too many characters to give any their due.
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